Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Zdar....loverly, May 14

Hiya!
After a few action packed weeks of my birthday celebrations and good bye parties I am back in the school library (school is over my computer is just broken :( ) Trying to plan my 20 day adventure, then a 15 day adventure with my mom after that. It is a bit overwhelming and with further flight cancellations and delays with the volcano Ash i am apprehensive to book anything but trying to get all the research done so I have options! Also trying to psych myself up for my solo travel experience. I know it will be great but after travelling for 4 months with amazing people I can see myself getting lonely and being indecisive!

People from my program are leaving daily and it is very sad because some of them I am sure I will not see again. But these memories have been the best and they are not over yet!

This weekend I was able to visit the hometown of Zdar with my friend Hana. It is about 3 hours away from Prague by train. The second largest fun fair festival in the Czech Republic was being held there this weekend. We arrived at the airport and I met her mother.Hana proceeded to be the translator the whole time because her family does not speak English, some of her friends did but it was a small town and i did get started at quite often when i was talking. (Kinda felt like a celebrity!) On the way to her house she said that her dad had dressed up to meet me, and when we walked in she said he was drunk because he was nervous. it felt very odd to make people nervous but they had never had a guest from America before. They were so hospitable the whole time getting me anything I needed. It was honestly so refreshing to be in a house and have a meal at a table and dinner conversation and everything. The fair was very fun, I rode rides and bought typical Czech sweets and the weirdiest gyro I've ever had. Pita, meat, ketchup, mayonnaise, and some spicy sauce. Hana's dad and brother kept offering my shots of SLivoviche, a terrible Czech alcohol that burns all the way down. But it is customary for them to offer and impolite if I refuse :)
I met her grandparents and her grandpa talked to me about cowboys and Indians and sang the only English that he knew :) their house smelled like home baked cookies and he is a carver and gave me a box that he had carved. It really touched my heart!
I can honestly say this is the type of experience I have been looking for here and experienced it when I went to Znojmo with my roommates and one of their Moravian boyfriends. It was so great to get away from the city and see the countryside and how most Czech people live. Most of the students go home EVERY weekend to spend in their villages with their family. the train stations are mob scenes on Fridays and Mondays! I think this inspired me to do trains and ferries for my solo travel because I will be able to see so much more. i wish i had pictures to show you but my computer is broke. just expect 2000 pictures in July when i get home and can upload them :)
I leave Thursday (2 days!) for Ireland. Bought a 1 way ticket. Finding my way home from there. Sometimes in life you have to bite off more than you can chew! Wish me luck and prayers.
Love you all,
Peace
Shanan

Monday, May 3, 2010

A great Spring Break in Munich and Amsterdam!






hello family and friends,
it has been some time now. I had a delicious spring break full of fun, litre beers, and Holland tulips. I am back at school for an intensive course which is four days of 6 hours of class. I spent all day in class thinking about all the papers i have to write, the planning i have to do for after school travels and all the fun activities that are going on for the last two weeks of the program! The class is strategic risk management and today we learned about decision and performance quality and that "paralysis is a consequence of having too many choices" thats kind of how i feel about my travels after school,, i have so many plans and ideas and so many places to go and i am paralyzed and afraid to make certain plans in case other more interesting options arise!! oh the trials and tribulations of being in Europe :)

(there are two boys behind me in the computer lab speaking Norwegian....such an interesting, cool, language)

I feel like after traveling for 10 days and experiencing the volcano and everything i have learned a lot about traveling. I have a list of things I am learning trip by trip:
1. How to dodge the transportation police in various countries
2. How to prioritize what i want to do/see the most because there is never enough time for it all
3. How to use the toilets here...big button for #2. little button for #1
4. How to take a deep breathe and a moment to truly enjoy and appreciate where i am
5. Do not get in the way of the trams, they will not stop.
6. Expect to be kissed on teh cheek when meeting some Europeans
7. How to drink lots of (good) beer!
8. How to speak slower or use different words to be understood, the American accent is hard I guess and we speak really fast!
9. Do not expect good customer service in the Czech Republic

I'm going to have to sum up spring break in a few key points because i have a 5 page paper to write and a nation to nation party to attend later tonight. It is German and Austria party and Germany is one of my favorite countries!!!

MUNICH:
Bused to Munich and went straight to Spring Fest which is a much smaller version of Oktoberfest. The beer gardens were amazing and since it was 4 in the afternoon we just felt the vibe ofr awhile and sipped on a litre beer (ummmmmmm) while admiring the other attendees. There were families and older men sitting around chatting and laughing, the beer garden waitresses (Im sure they have a special name) were often older women who would carry at least 8 litre beers around to the tables. all the servers and lots of the people there wore the traditional leiderhosen and the women had their traditional dress which really accentuated the breastal region :).
Second day in Munich and we went to a large flea market which had great stuff. I got a cool red hat, some religious charms, and some gifts to bring home.
also spent the afternoon at the beer garden (beer garden, flea market, and fair with rides and stuff were all in the same park) we met a groups of about 8 German men that were part of a 16th century war reenactment club. and we beer gardened it up with them. There was polka music playing and giant giant pretzels and bratwurst, everything German you could imagine, it was ggreat!!!

Last day we did a walking tour and rented bikes and rode around. This is the most bike friendly city i have ever seen and even on the roads i felt completely safe because the cars give way to bikes! walkers even give way to bikes. There was a nudist meadow in this large park where we saw some sunbathers....very interesting.
Spent one day in the airport trying to figure out if the volcano would let us continue our spring break. flights were cancelled all over the place and so we were trying our train and bus options as well. I almost gave up and was thinking about going to Austria but they finally opened up the next day.
AMSTERDAM:
Arrived to a beautiful day, went to our hostel in a prime location and started wandering the canals of Amsterdam. Something we would end up doing a lot because they were so confusing and I got lost so much!! We actually had some other friends here at the same time so we found them and went to a coffee shop. Walked quickly through the red light district that night just to check it out and see what all the hub ub was about. It was weird for sure. The next day we went to the Ann Frank house and saw the whole thing, the museum is really cool and is the actual house with pictures still on the wall and everything; very moving. Found some markets, a book market and tulip/flower market along the canals and walked them. Had such beautiful weather here that the next day we went to a large park and hung out there, some friends rented bikes so we traded for about hour. Amsterdam is well known for its bike friendly streets and have separate lanes and everything. the canals were really cool and i felt close to the ocean the whole time but kind of closed in because the narrow streets and tall buildings. bought a picnic from the store and enjoyed our last full day of spring break. the next day we headed home around 5 but not before hitting up one more market. thanks mom for giving me an odd love for flea markets. :) love ya.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Prepare for Spring Break 2010

Yeah for Thursdays!

I had a productive week, went to a soccer game between the town rivals on Monday and almost got beat up on the tram ride home :O. Finished a paper for school and am in the process of booking a trip to Rome over my birthday weekend!

This morning I ate Aloe Vera yoghurt which I thought was blog worthy, I've only ever seen that as a lotion scent. It was not delicious for future reference. I am doing laundry in the sink this morning and preparing for my 10 day trip! The closest thing I've done to true backpacking since I've been here. I am leaving tomorrow morning for 4 days in Munich where Spring Fest is going on. A mini version of Octoberfest with music and the like. I have heard really good things about Munich and I'm also going to try and sneak into a sold out concert of Mumford and Sons; a European band I REALLY like!!
After Munich I fly to Amsterdam with a large number of girls and we will spend four days there, I will probably make a day trip to Belgium or Rotterdam or another place close. I still cannot figure out how I am going to fit everything in my medium sized back pack for 10 days, I'm not sure about Munich but Amsterdam is quite expensive so I will be packing salami and cheese and living of fruit and the like. It may sound funny but random picnic spots with friends are my favorite!
I met a girl studying in Amsterdam last night at Juve (the school pub :)) and she is sending me a list of things to do (and eat!!) while I am there. I love personal recommendations!
Cloudy day in Prague so the perfect weather to get stuff done!

Wish you were here!

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Kutna Hora - Church of Bones

Went to Kutna Hora yesterday, a small town about an hour outside of Prague that has a church made out of bones. Figured out the train and got on, met a couple from Panama that asked directions (We must have looked like I knew what we were doing). We had to transfer one train but our first was delayed so we waited at the middle bus station for awhile. Made it to Kutna Hora and first impressions of the town were not so good. Found the church but it was creepy so took the appropriate amount of pictures, felt odd taking pictures of skeletons and it was so cold in there you could see your breathe, Creepy! made the rounds of another supposedly famous church nearby but it had been redone and had no character. We bought a beer that we thought was local but found out that Heineken had bought out the brewery. We heard about another fancy church and got a ride into the city center. It was sunny and nice and the church was beautiful on the outside but the thought of going in was less than enthusiastic so we enjoyed the sun, found a pub, drank some Budvars while overlooking a green valley and hearing the church bells ring. Sat next to what looked like some Czech hippies, found an awesome rusty bike. Made it back to the train station after meeting an odd American family in the bus. We watched our train pull away and asked some men what time the next one left, without speaking or understanding one single word we managed to communicate with them. Found a word in common and asked them where the nearest pivo was. Went to a restaurant where some hockey was on, the odd American family dumped their 18 year old son on us. (weird) but after another round we were at the train station again only to find out train had been delayed an hour to 'techinal difficulties'. while waiting we met some boys from Denmark and talked politics and life stories with them :) Got back to Prague late but in time for some dinner and to get ready for the nation to nation which was Latino themed. Meeting the Danish boys for coffee at my favorite hole in the wall shop.
Lovin life, this last week has been full of fun and unanticipated adventures.

The Most Perfect Day - Happy Easter

Mikoluv Moravia,
April 4th 2010
The most perfect-us day
This day was amazing, I of course am writing it after the fact because I only ever have time to make bullet points and try to remember all the amazing things that happen to me on adventures. but this one goes down in history :)
I was in Mikoluv Moravia (which is a part of the CR but kind of thought of as its own country) with a school trip that the day before had taken us to a glass blowing factory full of men in funny outfits blowing glass for rich people. As an Environmental Health and Industrial Hygiene graduate this factory would not have passed any health guidelines and standards (and the porn calendars on the walls would have gotten a thumbs down in the US as well) The bus took us about three hours from Prague southerly, once we left Prague the countryside is breathtaking and amazing and reminds me of Kansas and the land of Oz mixed together. I thought long and hard about buying the fam some glass at the store but decided it would be a travel nightmare so I just took pictures of what I would have bought you :) We did a wine tasting which was pretty in depth and we all left the cellar feeling good :) HISTORY TIDBIT: Moravia is wine country and has a high unemployment rate since they joined the EU, this is because limits were put on the agriculture once they joined. We then made it to the small town of mikoluv which is near the Austrian border, and in wine country. We stayed in a nice hotel (not a hostel for once!) which even had a ba-day (not sure how to spell that). On Saturday we were up early for some good FREE! breakfast which I'm not sure if I;ve written about yet but is very different then our typical breakfast food. Here in the Czech republic its always salami, ham, cheese, bread rolls, some yogurt and cereal and sausages. My French roommates always have chocolate and sweet thingsfor breakfast which is different but awesome! then we went to Vienna Austria. we only had 5 hours there and after experiencing some large travel group stress we broke up into smaller groups and went to a produce/flea market and had some Vienna coffee and high on caffeine and life wandered the town finding many important buildings and monuments. We saw the summer palaces of the Hapsburg family which I am learning alot about in Cultural history class beautiful fruit and sweet stands at the market, saw some amazing break dancers (I love the random things that we run into). They prayed before they dance and said "we've got to pray to make it through the day" .
Tried the so-called famous Sacher cake which was very disappointing and then we hung out in a park and played Frisbee for a bit and stumbled upon some cool graffiti. The bus took us back to Mikoluv for a fancy dinner. The week was shaping up to make me feel very dignified and mature.

But alas as cool as all of this is none of it was part of the most perfect-us day. After drinking wine for a good portion of the night with my colleagues (this is what the czech students call their class mates) I got up early to climb this little hill with a chapel on it and watch the sun rise. I made it to the chateau and took pictures of the beautiful scenery and the gardens. As a friend and i were walking back to the hotel to change for Easter mass we stopped in an antique store in a small alley way....as we were looking the older man at his desk started talking to us in czech. I responded my usual response "ne mluvime czesky" ( I don't speak Czech) and he breaks out in English with a great British sounding accent. It turns out he lived in Chicago, California and australia, so we had a good long conversation and it was great :) it made my heart smile that I could have somethings in common and things to talk about with a man in a store in a small alley way in a small town in Moravia. Made it to Ester mass which was said in Czech, an set in an amazingly beautiful church. (this is a common theme I am finding) each church i go into is so elaborately decorated with elegant paintings and statues. A little girl got baptized and I realized that the songs the sing have the same melody, which means they are the same songs and responses we have.
We left mass at 11:25, some friends and i decided to break off from the school group and figure out a way to explore Vienna for another day. It just so happens that one of my flat mates is kind of dating a boy from Moravia and he invited her to his hometown which was close to Mikoluv, my roomie and i tagged along (after asking him first of course). The train to his town left at 12:05. We literally ran up this hill and stopped in the antique store to get a quick souvenir which our new friend gave us for cheap cause he is so cool. We booked it to where we thought the train station might be wandered into a building by the tracks and the adventure begins!! In smaller town Moravia not many people speak English so we tried to communicate with the lady we wanted to go to Znojmo, we wrote it down for her and she frantically pointed outside. So we ran out and jumped on the train. With no idea whether it was the right one fr not or if we would get thrown off for not having tickets we stayed on. It was an adrenaline rush and turned out we had made it to the right one. Once in Znojmo we met Lucas's family and his mom made us a bomb-dig home made lunch, he drove us (after not riding in a car for a few moths it was cool) to a castle near his house that we toured, saw some beautiful countryside, went for a little nature hike around the castle, and to top it off he took us to his wine cellar and vineyard. That's right I am now on the prowl for a Moravian boy that has a family vineyard! His dad met us there and we tested the wine and heard the history of the cellar belonging to Germans during the occupation and how to make wine and such and such. It was like our own private tour and I loved loved loved meeting the locals and seeing a family and eating home cooked meals. These are the kind f adventures that I live for! I hate to say it but monuments and churches and castles all start to look the same after awhile. I think i smiled all day long and it kept getting bigger and bigger because of all the cool things that happened.
The monday after easter they have a tradition there that the men and boys go to girls houses and hit them with a stick that has ribbons on the end, this is to keep them young and pretty and healthy. The girls then have to give them alcohol or food. We walked around small Znojmo on monday and it was funny seeing small boys and grown men rushing around with their sticks. It was a cloudy day but we saw the rest of the city and got on a bus back to Prague. The bus was full but there were people that had no problem standing for the 3 hour bus ride in the alley. It was also cool to see the samll town buses and how at every station there were small groups of people saying hello and good bye to their loved ones. Most Czech students go home almost every weekend.

I am uploading the pictures on to picasa which I got running, let me know if you need the link!

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Cyber Laundromat- sounds like an out of body experience, but it's not.

I'm on a blogging rampage this week!

At the laundromat now (Prague CYBER Laundromat to be exact) which is always a fun experience. Yesterday was cloudy and cold but we've got another nice one today, very sunny. I went out for a friends birthday at a nice thai restaurant last night. It was pretty fancy and the most I've spent on a meal here yet. 200 Kc which is about 10 dollars. But it was nice to have something a little different with some spice to it. I may have mentioned but the food here is not very flavorful and they don't provide sauces at all. You have to pay for Ketchup!!!! (ahhhhhh) One thing that does have flavor here is a dessert called Medovnik. It is a Czech dessert i guess and i finally tried it yesterday. YUMMM It's a honey cake with lot's of layers of cake and frosting-ish stuff and then this crushed cookie on top...delish! Another point for the Czech Republic.
Tonight I'm going to a music and film festival after class then will probably hang out with some freinds over a beer. I'm going on a school trip to Southern Moravia and Vienna this weekend. A lot of Czeh and Slovak students are going home for Easter weekend. We don't have school on Monday, my Czech friend Hana invited me back to her home town on Monday for Easter celebrations. A tradition here is on Easter Monday the boys knock on teh doors and have these special Easter sticks that they hit the girls with. It's supposed to keep the girls looking nice and young for the coming year (hmmmm unusual way to go about it :)) Then the girls give them candy or alcohol. I'm kind of oddly excited about seeing this play out. They are selling the sticks all over in the stores, they are just woven branches with ribbons on the end. I'm trying to figure out a bus from Vienna to her smaller town in teh Czech Republic. If that doesn't pan out I think I'm gonna leave the school group on Sunday and find a hiking place and do that on monday. Yay for spring~!

Czech words I know:
Smirzlina: Ice Cream
Dobre Den: good day
Ajoy: hi
Dekuji: Thank you
Prosime: please
Prominte: excuse me
Ne Mluvime Czesky: i don't speak czech
Sem Americanka: I am American
Potriviny: store/shop
Tabak: tobacco store where you can by tram tickets and snacks
Zen: here
Pivo: beer
Jedno Pivo Prosime: another beer please :)

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Up with the sun - March 31st

I'm up with the sun this morning and studying for my European Integration midterm. I did make an appearance at the Canadian nation to nation last night but pulled myself away to make tram 58 home.
I went running yesterday morning in the park with the man on the horse statue and it reminded me of a night last week that I didn't blog about. It was a pretty normal night but really had an impact on me for some reason. After my class a few friends and I decided to walk up through this park to a place that has a great view of Prague and watch the sun set. As we were walking up there we ran into a street dance band practicing a dance. It was so inner city but so cool, we found a column to sit on and watched some runners and strollers and the beautiful city of Prague. A little boy and his dad were sitting across from us and when they left he did a big jump to dismount, it was cute and we all clapped and the dad told his son to take a bow. In that moment I thought how amazing the little things are. If I didn't see another historical church or monument while I am here and could just watch the people here go through everyday life I think I would be satisfied. I feel like I keep repeating and writing about the little differences that I notice everyday but the similarities are what amaze me at the same time.
Ok so watching other ppl live their pretty normal lives would probably get boring but I guess I'm realizing that I learn so much here everyday and a ride to school on the tram or a walk around town seeing all the tourists in one neighborhood and then being in a normal neighborhood one block over is just as educational sometimes as a guided walking tour of historical places.

I love this place. I love all new places and realize everyday how all my experiences added up have allowed me to acknowledge and appreciate new places and new cultures. I find myself meeting new people, relating to them, and finding things in common by talking about my time in Austin or Chicago or Honduras and Ecuador. I'm so grateful that Jim Dad and Julie Mom and my mom and dad have fostered in me an interest in the unknown and have supported me in all that I do..........just a heads up, I may keep doing it for a bit :)

Miss ya.

mir (peace)



Grafitti in Berlin



Couples Walking in the Lustgarten in Berlin



Feeling a presence on the Charles Bridge



Playing chess in the Hungarian baths.....I want this to be me someday, hat included.



Secret Canal - Prague